What they're not telling you: # "Marylanders Are voting-rights-groups-sue-to-stop-doj-from-collecting-state-voter-lists.html" title="Voting Rights Groups Sue To Stop DOJ From Collecting State Voter Lists" style="color:#1a1a1a;text-decoration:underline;text-decoration-style:dotted;font-weight:500;">Voting With Their Feet": Johns Hopkins Finds Blue State Exodus To Persist For Years ## SECTION 1: THE STORY More than half of Baltimore residents surveyed by Johns Hopkins University say they expect to relocate within three years. The data comes from a Johns Hopkins survey conducted between September and November 2024. According to reporting in the Baltimore Sun, 42% of Baltimore City residents want to leave the city entirely.
What the Documents Show
Of that group, 15% plan to exit Maryland altogether, while 27% expect to remain elsewhere in the state. Among the 58% planning to stay in Baltimore, fewer than two-thirds—only 36%—expect to remain in their current neighborhood. The remaining 22% anticipate moving to a different part of the city. The pattern extends beyond city limits. Baltimore County residents also show high mobility intentions, though with a different geographic preference: 66% of those planning to move say they expect to stay within the county.
Follow the Money
Republican Delegate Kathy Szeliga, Vice Chair of the Maryland Freedom Caucus, framed the exodus through a policy lens in comments attributed to the source material. Szeliga cited "crushing taxes, unaffordable energy bills, and concerns about public safety" alongside "the failing education system" as drivers of outmigration. She attributed the trend directly to Governor Wes Moore's administration, stating that "people are voting with their feet and leaving Maryland." Fellow Republican Delegate Robin Grammer, identified as a founding member of an unspecified legislative caucus, made a similar claim, attributing the desire to flee to "Governor Moore's policies on crime, affordability, and government competence." The Johns Hopkins data itself does not specify which policy areas respondents identified as reasons for their intended moves. The survey measures stated relocation intentions but does not appear to have published granular breakdowns of underlying causes in the material provided here. That distinction matters: we know residents intend to move, and we know what some legislators claim motivates those moves, but the actual causal chain remains partially obscured in the available source material. Historical context adds weight to the trend.
What Else We Know
Baltimore City's population has fallen approximately 40% since its peak in the 1950s, a documented demographic collapse driven by deindustrialization, suburbanization, and decades of urban disinvestment. Whether current outmigration represents acceleration, plateau, or cyclical variation relative to that long-term trend is not addressed in the Johns Hopkins survey as described here. The survey was conducted during a period of documented national inflation, rising housing costs, and public safety concerns that have affected multiple U.S. cities regardless of partisan governance. Isolating Maryland-specific and governance-specific factors from broader macroeconomic pressures requires data the source material does not provide. The Johns Hopkins research appears to document intention, not yet outcome.
Primary Sources
- Source: ZeroHedge
- Category: Unexplained
- Cross-reference independently — don't take our word for it.
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